Authors: Ivan Vladislavic
Tags: #Contemporary, #Contemporary Fiction, #literary fiction, #South Africa, #apartheid, #Johannesburg, #photography, #memory, #past, #history, #art, #racial tension, #social inequality, #gated community, #activism, #public/private, #reality, #politics, #the city, #psycho-geography, #University of Johannesburg Creative Writing Prize, #David Goldblatt, #double exposure, #college dropout, #1980s, #Bez Valley, #suburbs, #letters, #André Brink, #South African Sunday Times fiction prize
The photographs I'd shown at the Switch Box, my corner of a group exhibition called
Public][Private
, were of walls. Janie had seen them there and been struck, she said, by their chilly lack of judgement. She showed me a snap of her favourite on her cellphone
â
âI hope you don't mind, it's just for reference'
â
a bleak suburban wall pierced by a loophole, through which you can see a grim warning notice beside a picture of a hooded cobra: âSnake breeding facility
â
Trespassers beware!'
I laid out the full set of prints.
âWhat's with the walls?' she asked as we flipped through
them.
I tried to explain my longing for the vanished city. As the walls go on rising, the character of the place grows more and more obscure. The mood of a street or suburb, that unlikely blend of outlooks expressed by the houses and the people living in them, no longer brushes off on you as you pass. You think there is life behind one guarded façade or another, a mind behind the blank stare, but you cannot be
sure.
âIt's creepy,' she said, âI absolutely agree. It's like those people at Moyo who eat three courses without taking off their shades. You think they must be watching you, and so you watch them, which is the whole point.'
I take comfort in the debris strewn over the walls: the shadows of numbers pilfered for scrap, the unstrung lyres of electric fencing, the armed response signs, especially the old and weathered ones, which fade unevenly depending on how their colours stand up to the sun. Sometimes the names and numbers of the companies have bleached out entirely while the emblems of snarling dogs and charging elephants persist. All that remains on the oldest signs is two black pistols pointed at one another in a perpetual showdown. Their candour is admirable. They're empty gestures, like snapped wires and dog-eared spikes. The company faded away years ago, but their boards are still everywhere saying, âBang!'
I had photographed walls all over the city, some of them chanced upon during walks, others spotted from the car, focusing on the clutter, the faded threats, the scars of signs ripped from painted surfaces like sticking plasters. There was nobody to be seen in any of the photos except for one, which showed a woman beside a wooden door in a brick
wall.
âAnd who is this?' Janie asked.
âThat's Mrs Magwaza. She noticed me loitering with intent and came out to see what I wanted. She was the first of my thresholders.'
âApparently it's good strategy for the interviewee to ask a couple of questions,' I said from the sink, where I was rinsing cups for coffee.
âSays who? Dr Phil?'
âI read it in
Business Report
actually, in one of those motivational columns. Best thing in the paper in my opinion. I guess they were talking about job interviews, but I'm sure it applies everywhere.'
âWhat's the idea?'
âAsking some questions of your own shows that you're curious, that you're interested in the world and other people, in a healthy
way.'
âYour egotism has limits.'
âExactly.'
There was a pause while I ground the beans and she read about the Ethiopian coffee-drinking ceremony on the package. Then she said, âReady when you
are.'
âDo you like your
job?'
âSome of it. It's quite varied, mostly interviews, personality pieces or profiles like this one. I don't really do straight features. And then I've got a blog where I review exhibitions and concerts, as well as art and design books, interior design and landscaping, collectables, coffee-table stuff. It's a great way to build up a library.
âOn the blog I also offer household hints, taking stains out of carpets, dyeing cottons with indigenous herbal teas, mixing your own environmentally friendly air-fresheners. And then stuff like how to make a snow cave and survive if you're buried under an avalanche or why everyone should carry a surgical glove and a clove in the cubbyhole. The whole blog has this dualism. It's like the Book of the Week meets Reuben the Screwman.'
A happy meeting, I thought. I said, âThat's incredible.'
âIt's my thing, it's what I'm known
for.'
I was grinning, but she went on, âI've got the best advice. The tips are definitive.'
âFor example
â¦'
âWell.' She scraped some orange pulp off the rim of the glass on her finger and put it in her mouth. âOkay. You know how frustrating it is to get the price tags off things? They make them extra sticky so that shoplifters can't switch them around. They don't care what happens when you get the thing home. Some people couldn't be bothered. Ten years later, the bathroom scale's still got the bar code stuck to it. Other people can't wait to get rid of them and every last smear of glue must go, even if they have to swab it off with benzine, it's like a sign that they've taken possession. I'm sort of in-between, it depends on the object. If it's cheap and nasty, I don't really mind. Anyway, here's the tip: if you wave the flame of a cigarette lighter over the tag for a few seconds, it will peel off just like
that
.' A castanet click of the fingers. âOf course, you've got to be careful when you're playing with fire. It works perfectly on glass, I promise, there's no need to kill yourself scratching the price off a bottle of wine. It works on books too. Just watch you don't set the merchandise alight.'
âThat's amazing.' I meant
it.
âI can get merlot out of a white linen sofa like
that
'
â
splitting another second between thumb and middle finger
â
âbut I won't bore you with the details.'
âAnd then you also write criticism about art and music.'
âJa.'
âAre you serious?'
âWell, it's meant to be funny, obviously. Give me some credit, Neville. I know the difference between a household hint and an oratorio by Handel. It's a branding thing, it gives me the edge on my competitors, and readers find the mix amusing. But the hints work, believe me, I test them all myself. It's a question of credibility. Without that, everything would fall apart.'
âSaul Auerbach,' she said, âhe was the reason you became a photographer.'
âNo, we can't blame him for that.'
âBut he influenced
you.'
I let the statement settle while I drove the plunger down to the bottom of the cafetière.
âMy uncle had a photograph by Auerbach in his house when I was a kid. You would recognize it, I'm sure, a street corner in Judith's Paarl. It really bothered me. I couldn't see the point of having it on the wall. Then in my student days my father gave me a copy of Auerbach's first book and that was my real introduction to his work. To be honest, it was disturbing to see my own world presented so coldly. For the first time, the houses I lived in, the people I passed in the street were at the right distance to be grasped fully. They looked so solid, they were so
there
, I felt I knew them all. And yet there was a levity to them as well, because a photograph is a flimsy thing when you compare it to the world. It's always on the verge of floating away or turning to ashes. You don't want to go waving a lighter in that vicinity.
âBut I'm speculating. I might be making it up. I
must
be making some of it up, because I can only imagine what I saw when I first looked at an Auerbach. They've been stored in the darkroom of my memory for too long, reproduced a hundred times for a hundred different reasons, packed away again under the tissue-paper layers of living, and I'm not sure at all what they revealed to my young self.'
Apparently a personality could get away with phrases like âthe darkroom of memory' or âtissue-paper layers of living' if the delivery was natural enough.
âDid you ever meet?'
A direct question. I'd meant to avoid the subject, but now I told her about my day with Auerbach and Brookes. The gist of it anyway. Although the experience had made a more decisive impression on me than the photographs themselves, I had seldom spoken about it and the details had been slipping away. The last time Leora and I discussed my initiation, as she calls it, I had the feeling I was embellishing, adding in touches I couldn't possibly have remembered. These days, when I think about that time, Auerbach's accidental portraits come into my mind and they seem more reliable than my own memories.
Janie was curious about Auerbach's legendary impatience with people and patience with light. Is it true, she wanted to know, that he'll wait all day for a shadow to lengthen?
I answered as well as I could and she wrote in the green notebook. I wondered what she was writing down that she could not retrieve from the recorder.
The gist. It's always the gist, isn't it? We're left with so little to go on. Only the present is full enough to seem complete, and even that is an optical illusion. The moment is bleeding off the page. We live on the precipice of our perceptions. At the edge of every living instant, the world shears away like a cliff of ice into the sea of what is forgotten.
Mrs Magwaza was my first thresholder. Despite an apparently impenetrable wall, she had spotted me outside her house. Perhaps a neighbour with a clear view of the street had called to alert her to my suspicious presence. She came out and challenged me as I was setting up the tripod on the opposite kerb. Once I'd explained, she was happy enough to pose, although I had to dissuade her from going inside first to change into her Sunday
best.
In the photo, she is holding my dissuasion in her left hand, a small consideration, which I'd been carrying in the cubbyhole for this very purpose. If not for the way she presents the envelope to the camera, suggesting that it's more important than this, you might think it is a letter she has just retrieved from the box in the wall beside her. In her housecoat and slippers, she looks like an office cleaner accepting a long-service award or a lucky shopper who has just won a voucher in a raffle at the supermarket.
Mrs Magwaza gave me faith in the human subject. I admired the way she stood between me and her privacy like an amiable security guard. I was moved.
âWeren't you curious to go inside,' Janie asked, âto see how she lives?'
âNot at
all.'
âI really want to see behind the wall.'
âI don't. Just thinking about the interior makes me squirm.'
I showed her the pictures that had followed: Mr Passmore of Dowerglen at his curly wrought-iron gate. On the wall of prefab cement panels is one of those increasingly rare signs that says âBeware of the Dog! Pasop vir die Hond!' The letterbox is an alpine chalet with a slate roof. Then old Mrs Spoerk with her nursery rhyme box in the shape of a boot, a fibreglass novelty from the '60s that Dr Pinheiro would have given his eye teeth
for.
These were the photos Claudia Fischhoff had come to see a few months ago. Out of the blue, she had called to say she was curating a show for the Pollak and thought my project might fit the bill. âProject' was too grand a term, but I was flattered. Presumably Claudia's interest had fuelled Janie's. But what had prompted Claudia's? I had no idea. One hand was washing the other, scratching the reciprocal itch, doing what hands apparently do in the wonderful world of appearances.
I had taken half a dozen portraits of people at their gates before I noticed that every one of them included a letterbox. I pointed it out to Janie as we leafed through the prints.
âI've got it into my head that the people look like their letterboxes. What do you think? It's like people and their dogs. Have you ever been to a dog show? The resemblances are uncanny. The chap with the St Bernard always has a mop of curls and a shaggy beard. The elegant anorexics have borzois. Retired ballerinas, I'm sure. There are unwritten rules at play. Take a look at Roelof here with his browbeaten letterbox. Have you ever seen such an unhappy-looking man? It's like he's been cemented into a wall himself.'
I pulled the Charade out of the garage (quite right, I bought it for the name) and we went down into Bez Valley. She didn't drive at all, Janie said. When I asked why not, she said she was ahead of the game, preparing for the day we ran out of gas, collectively. I took this as a criticism. She was growing her own vegetables too and generating her own electricity.
On the drive, her phone sneezed twice to attract attention. The conversations were quick and cryptic. Hey. Cool. You wish. She sent two rapid-fire text messages. Between calls, she took photos with her left hand, reaching out of the window with a small silver camera as if she were tapping ash off a cigarette.
âYou're busy,' I
said.
âPopular,' she corrected me. âI'm quite famous, you know. I've been on the cover of
Lifestyle
. I'm my own wallpaper.' Holding up the phone for me to
see.
I'd spoken to Hennie Nothnagel on the phone half a dozen times, and called the night before to confirm our appointment, but when we got to the address in Second Street, he was out. âSometimes they get cold feet,' I said. âEven though we've been introduced and there's a connection, they suddenly decide it's a scam. They worry they're going to get burgled.'
âYou don't look like a criminal,' she
said.
âThank
you.'
Hennie's wall would not last: it was leaning out over the pavement as if it might fall the next time the wind blew. Panels between the pillars showed little golfers in silhouette cut from iron sheets. The round heads of the drivers at the top of the backswing created a decorative border like a rolling wave. Beside the gate was the classic golf ball letterbox that had first attracted my attention.